How To: Never Forget -a Holocaust remembrance film by Montana Tucker

  Рет қаралды 32,155

Montana Tucker

Montana Tucker

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 194
@19777daniel
@19777daniel Жыл бұрын
I'm from Poland I live in the UK now I'm proud of you for presenting what happened we Poles will not forget these events!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@justinmix143
@justinmix143 Жыл бұрын
So many Poles killed by Nazi death machine. May they be remembered forever. As should the thousands of unbelievably brave Polish men & women who fought & died w/ the Resistance. Hardly a nobler cause or a braver people has there ever been. May eternal rest & peace be theirs forever, and their names & heroism never forgotten. 🇵🇱🤝🇺🇸
@haileeraestout5567
@haileeraestout5567 Жыл бұрын
Now All The Enemies Are Burning In Hel And When The Day Comes They Will Face The Victims And Apologize For What They Did To Them
@extanegautham8950
@extanegautham8950 11 ай бұрын
Thank you Daniel!
@terigiese1322
@terigiese1322 Жыл бұрын
My Grandmother also was a survivor.She and her Mother BARELY escaped with their lives.The stories she shared with me right before she passed were absolutely gut wrenching.Bless your beautiful heart for sharing this with us!Sending much love to you and your family🙏🏻😌🤍💫
@chadfren
@chadfren Жыл бұрын
I've heard that story 6,000,000 times from 6,000,000 different jews. What the hell is going on here?
@kristavieth7927
@kristavieth7927 Жыл бұрын
Kelly Clarkson Show brought me here. I am from a small North Texas town close to where Kelly is from and we also learned about it in school and even read the diary of Anne Frank together as a class. Thank you for sharing your family's story with all of us. I haven't cried this much in awhile.
@jorgegaston5391
@jorgegaston5391 Жыл бұрын
Since childhood, I’ve read about the 2nd World War, but behind the Axis powers was a notorious Nazi and the hatred for Jews. In 2015, I attended Strayer University for my Bachelors run. I had this history teacher that taught me the American World History pre in the Spring term and the post in the Summer. But there’s something else: he’s a Ukrainian-Russian decent and when this Holocaust happened from 1936-1945, and he was reading to us about it, he was crying in tears because he had lost his grandparents and his father. So I got out of my seat and put my hands around him. Almost 3 years ago, I never knew who you was on the outskirts of the music business until I heard “Hola”. When I looked into it deep, it took me way back. Your grandma is a Icon. If anybody that I wanna talk to and how to put things in respective would be you. Your grandma is my inspiration because she is a survivor. I cried every time I visited the American Jewish Museum’s 2nd floor in Philadelphia, Pa, because these little children were too too young to die. They have the artifacts of the what happened from 1933-1945. Poland is one of the countries I would love to visit before I turn 75 in 2047.
@dianebutler5977
@dianebutler5977 Жыл бұрын
I will tell the story with you...always. Around the age of 13 I found a book at my Nan and Pop's house called 'Hitler's Ovens'; it was so disturbing I thought there was no way it could be true...I researched, studied and with the advent of the internet searched the many articles and videos about the Holocaust. Disturbing and unfortunately true I make it my responsibility to educate others about this terrible event in history! I will never forget. Thank-you for doing your part in educating others with the truth.
@jadasutton7218
@jadasutton7218 Жыл бұрын
This has touched my heart. It’s sad knowing the amount of people who are uneducated on this topic. I was privilege enough to be taught this at school here in Australia but even with that, It still only scraped the surface. I know Jewish history deserves more than just being taught in unit at school, so I really enjoyed watching this video and I am motivated to learn even more now❤️❤️❤️❤️
@limejockey123
@limejockey123 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for putting this here so more people can see it. This needs to get out and seen by as many people as possible
@lynnreymond654
@lynnreymond654 Жыл бұрын
As I sit here crying I want to congratulate you for making this movie & retelling this tragedy. Light overcomes darkness💜💜💜
@dianebutler5977
@dianebutler5977 Жыл бұрын
I certainly hope so...
@joebergovoy7347
@joebergovoy7347 Жыл бұрын
Beautiful job Montana!! Our ancestors our proud of you!! Keep it going, you won't always hear applause but many people are quietly holding onto your inner strength 🙏
@mayakovacevic6127
@mayakovacevic6127 Жыл бұрын
My great grandmother was a holocaust survivor, and sadly she passed away a few years ago. It’s heartbreaking what happened and especially what is happening now. My whole family lives in Israel while I live in America and having to worry every day if they are alive is something I don’t wish on my worst enemy
@jostiemof1989
@jostiemof1989 Жыл бұрын
This is so important to tell! Never forget. My grandparents are also survivors although they were not Jews. My grandmother was from the Ukraine where brothers of her were executed by the Nazi. My grandmother had to come with the Germans to work for 19 hours a day in a factory. The story she told about the camps and factories were horrible.
@ninagoldenberg5948
@ninagoldenberg5948 Жыл бұрын
You did not weigh how this would be viewed , you just felt the weight. You carry your grandmother's tale, in your talent. My father was too 13 and walked away from his mother. My son is a grandchild, like you. I am a mother, like your mom. From the chill, our children are here. The children, have been heard. The forest, where you stood, filming your documentary, planted in kindness, was beautiful, you were not wrong to say that.
@marthataylor5975
@marthataylor5975 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing this. I had the opportunity growing up to hear from Holocausts survivors who would come to my school, and out of all the assemblies we had, those are the ones I remember the most. May we all never forget what happened!
@muzaaaaak
@muzaaaaak Жыл бұрын
I don’t know how, nor why, but the KZbin algorithm connected us tonight. Thanks for sharing your personal story and journey. All us Jews must stick together. Strength in numbers!
@mitchberg8229
@mitchberg8229 Жыл бұрын
I was exposed to the Holocaust waaaay to early. It affected me intensely. And I figured as a kid "this story is so intense, so real, nobody can possibly ignore, much less deny, that it happened. And I'm amazed, and nauseated, to see I was wrong. It's profoundly depressing that we need to have videos like this to *convince* a generation that what happened, happened. So I'm grateful you did this.
@reliantncc1864
@reliantncc1864 Жыл бұрын
I also learned about it early, but it didn't really hit me until I was in my late 30s and I started reading survivor accounts. The writings of Elie Wiesel and Viktor Frankl and many others really got my attention. But I also got much out of the accounts of non-Jews who stumbled across the atrocities and felt the need to write about it. "Into that Darkness" and "Doctors from Hell" are two books that are examples of stories that are written by people who weren't victims of the Holocaust, but encountered it in some way that made them feel the need to write about it.
@marciekarlin1454
@marciekarlin1454 Жыл бұрын
This is so beautiful. Montana and Michelle, you did a beautiful job. Love to you and beautiful Lil. We will NEVER forget.
@UniqueDaily
@UniqueDaily Жыл бұрын
I’m beyond proud of you for this❤️
@MrArcherSterling
@MrArcherSterling Жыл бұрын
What does this shiska know? All hate the jews, and always will all groups must be made to come together under the Jews to stop the hate.
@buffalochic1974
@buffalochic1974 11 ай бұрын
Wow Montana thank you for sharing your families story with us. It must have been incredibly hard. I will never understand anti-Semitism or hate of any kind.
@_sleigher
@_sleigher Жыл бұрын
I've been to Struthof in France, Dachau in Germany and the Anne Frank house in the Netherlands. The feeling is so heavy. The mountain view from Struthof is beautiful and the things that took place there are horrifying. Thank you so much for sharing your story. I recommend people who visit any of these countries to go to these places and to continue to educate others about what happened there.
@dianebutler5977
@dianebutler5977 Жыл бұрын
Educate your children, watch 'Schindler's List' and Montana's documentary with them. It should be part of all high school' curriculum.
@mikesosa949
@mikesosa949 Жыл бұрын
God bless you, and your family and all the lost lives..so sad part of history..we need a dance of tears for what has happen.😢
@hanstoli6289
@hanstoli6289 Жыл бұрын
Wow. I can’t imagine how hard this was for you, but thank you for educating us
@roselynlugo5954
@roselynlugo5954 Жыл бұрын
Ty for sharing this! People need to learn about this part of history so we don’t make this mistake again and stop this hate towards all! Stay blessed and keep sharing ur family stories!
@BobvanT
@BobvanT Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much Montana for this - you absolutely rock ! ❤❤
@delowe
@delowe Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing your story and for trying to make a difference. Less than a year since you made this film, it is happening again right before our eyes. My parents managed to escape the Holocaust (my father was arrested on Kristalnacht. I lost over 1,000 members of my extended family. I discovered this by doing a family tree which I would strongly recommend you do. Then be certain to register there each of your family members who were murdered during the Shoah so that there is a name for every one of the 6,000,000. And look and see that today we are once again facing the same forces of evil and it is important that we all stand together and speak on behalf of our people who are once again being murdered and persecuted.
@dawndickson2156
@dawndickson2156 Жыл бұрын
Well done. I will pray this video is used in schools to teach generations to come of the horrors of the Holocaust. I have family in Germany that were killed for helping their Jewish neighbors. So many did not agree with the regime. May God help us all. There are so many individual stories. Each so precious. May we never forget.
@elenanapoles
@elenanapoles Жыл бұрын
Beautiful and very emotional!! Happy Birthday & Never forget.
@ginadilworth2889
@ginadilworth2889 Жыл бұрын
Saw you on Kelly Clarkson show today and had to come watch this we must never forget thank you for sharing this ❤️
@ruthzwilling1787
@ruthzwilling1787 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this difficult trip to Poland. As a child of survivors, also from Poland, I am frighten by the proliferation of antisemitism in the world. I pray that history will not repeat itself. I am grateful for your contribution to educating people about the Holocaust.
@davidk2925
@davidk2925 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for creating this video. You are a wonderful young woman for sharing this with the world. I am the grandson of my Auschwitz surviving grandmother and this video gives me an authentic video to share with my teen son and daughter. God bless you
@justinmix143
@justinmix143 Жыл бұрын
Your awesome dancing brought me here. I'm just so truly impressed & sincerely moved you would use your platform to shine the light on something so profoundly important. The world must never, EVER forget. Your dance career is amazing, but this is what will endure 200 years from now, and mean the most in the long run. You should be deeply proud of yourself, Montana. My family is Irish, but my nanny, as a baby/small child was a survivor of Treblinka. Her name was Nelly. We never knew until my mom saw her tattoo when she was hanging a picture one day. And then she told my parents everything. She was only 11 yrs old when the Nazis invaded Poland. Her parents, grandparents, older sister, little brothers, and most of her aunts, uncles, & cousins all perished in the Holocaust. Only she, her aunt, and older cousin survived from their family of over 30 people. My mother cried for days when Nelly told them her life story. My parents tokd ne & my sisters the deyeiks once we were older. Things that have haunted me forever. Like how after the Nazis liquidated the Jewish Ghetto, Nelly's baby brother was already sick & weak, & he basically suffocated when they were jam packed shoulder to shoulder locked in a train car for days with no food, water, place to relieve themselves, or way to even sit or lay down. For THREE days. Her little ill baby brother succumbed to the deadly conditions, and Nelly's mom wouldn't let him go, and held him to herself, wailing & crying for so long, finally she was beaten senseless by the other passengers, who were half mad with thirst and hypoxia (no oxygen to breathe). Nelly recognized one of her morgers attackers as her former kindergarten teacher from their village. I haven't seen Nelly since I was 6, but i think if her almost every day, love her so much, & will never, ever forget her. Thank you for being so intelligent, motivated, and kust generally wonderful, & especially for caring about what's truky important, and yakimg real action to maje a positive difference. Thats the best way we can try to ensure all the unimaginable, endless suffering from one of the darkest corners of mankind's history wasn't endured in vien. Shalom 🇮🇱
@LizaTacher
@LizaTacher 6 ай бұрын
Uff. So powerful. So sad. So important. Thank you for creating.
@danabooysen4672
@danabooysen4672 Жыл бұрын
Happy birthday wish you health, happiness and peace for the years to come. Thank you for educating the world and promoting peace. This world is still filled with so much cruelty and evil.
@HaleyMary
@HaleyMary Ай бұрын
This documentary is so powerful and touching. Since I was a teenager, I've read the diary of Anne Frank and watched movies about the Holocaust. It was shocking to me that when the invasion of Israel by Hamas happened and then the war on Hamas started, I saw my peers who I knew from the open mic and karaoke scene say things like, "Why does there need to be a Jewish state?" I had to tell them about world war 2 and the pogroms of Europe and eastern Europe leading up to world war 1. The ignorance among my millennial generation is astounding. Thank you for sharing this documentary. The account of the family along with the children being lined up and being shot and killed moved me to tears. This documentary needs to be seen by everyone.
@katiehanson6253
@katiehanson6253 Жыл бұрын
Love to you and your's. It must have been soo hard. And also, thank you for making the information more accessible. My introduction to the holocaust, was a black and white film my mom had to review as a teacher.... like in 94..... I can still remember the absolute horror, of watching from the doorway because I couldn't sleep, I also thought there is no way it's real.... people don't do that...people do,have and will do again! Unless we use our voice, platform, etc to make it known annnnnnd.Vote in people who say NEVER EVER EVER AGAIN.
@Deepuppy03
@Deepuppy03 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for posting this video. I know it was hard for you to go through and see all the horrible things that you did. We will NEVER FORGET. How can people do such atrocities to other people? I will never understand it. May g-d bless and watch over you and your family. ❤️🙏🏻✡️☮️✡️🙏🏻
@free2beemee
@free2beemee Жыл бұрын
Heart-wrenching to see and know what happened. Trying to make sense of it is impossible but I thank you for sharing. So many young people need to learn about what actually occurred. Sending love and prayers for you and your family. ❤
@leannsherman6723
@leannsherman6723 Жыл бұрын
You are so right that making sense of it is impossible. Many have tried.
@fredskolnick1183
@fredskolnick1183 Жыл бұрын
All honors to you Montana! Never forget!!! Thanks for this most important presentation!
@glynnrabin3342
@glynnrabin3342 Жыл бұрын
What you are doing is so important, I am grateful for people like you ❤
@rileymclaughlin6350
@rileymclaughlin6350 Жыл бұрын
This was so powerful… thank you for sharing this. I remember learning about the holocaust in school. This video is such a good start to helping expose this terrible reality to kids. Hopefully we can push schools to start teaching the truth again. This should never be forgotten.
@sophiet7637
@sophiet7637 Жыл бұрын
Hello Montana, so sorry but my Englisch is Not so Good. I Hope you can understand What i say. Ich komme aus Deutschland und es tut mir so so leid was deiner Familie und allen anderen angetan wurde. Ich habe zwar damit nichts zu tun aber, mir tut es vom tiefsten Herzen leid. Das was passiert ist soll sich nicht nochmal wiederholen. Thanks for all, your Videos are very Healthy❤️ Love yaa Montana🎀
@brittanynicole1106
@brittanynicole1106 Жыл бұрын
I know your grandparents are so proud of you for doing this. I guess I never even thought about the fact that their own neighbors and "friends" turned against them. That's something you just taught me. This documentary was hard to watch, but so important to watch. We read about the holocaust in school when I was in middle school. We watched the movies in high school, but I don't think schools are really teaching about it anymore, and that breaks my heart.
@ChosenChildofGod1
@ChosenChildofGod1 Жыл бұрын
Yet this is happening around the world now. As in friends neighbor's. Thank You this as we need to BRING SO MUCH MORE AWARENESS YES AROUND THE WORLD 🌎
@soupit32
@soupit32 Жыл бұрын
​@@ChosenChildofGod1oy vey it's anotha' SHOAH !!!
@lydiastormberg1075
@lydiastormberg1075 11 ай бұрын
As granddaughter of WW2 veteran as my grandpa fought against the Evil hatred. We can never let this history repeat it self. Thank you for for telling your story and telling the story of our past.
@murraykaufman2588
@murraykaufman2588 Жыл бұрын
Young Lady ( Montana ) - Excellent work . . . my father was a holocaust survivor along with his sister. After he passed away I found out that he actually had a wife and a child that were murdered by the Nazis. This explained the frequent nightmares and screaming I would hear as a child .. so along with the though of his loss of his parents and siblings and possibly grandparents... he lost his first wife and his child. Impact as a child of his life is unimaginable. Montana what you have done is incredible ... keep it up, however you are able.
@kellyr3179
@kellyr3179 Жыл бұрын
thank you for sharing Montana ❤ Its heartbreaking and cruel, but history must not forget. We must be kind and respectful to others. Sending you love.
@sygi31
@sygi31 Жыл бұрын
Dear Montana, KZbin brought me unexpectedly to your channel today through your dancing... I don't have jewish ancestry but I've always been so moved by their history, as i'm so moved by slavery history all around the world... i've been to Auschwitz when I was 15, the memory will remain until I die... I am a mother and I'm doing everything in our daily lives to transmit through past history to my son the importance of tolerance and love towards human beings 🙏🕯️ I'm really hopeful that new generations can counterbalance past history... Lots of love to you and your family ❤
@beckyklepper315
@beckyklepper315 Жыл бұрын
I saw your shorts...looked you up and found this. So important, so necessary. Thank you. It takes one...to never forget
@jamesmichaelwalker683
@jamesmichaelwalker683 9 ай бұрын
Great! So great to make this journey...
@Gretabpooh
@Gretabpooh Жыл бұрын
I've never had an opportunity to visit a former camp. But I did have the opportunity to visit the US Holocaust Museum in DC. I'm my family genealogist, so I knew my maternal great-great-grandmother was Jewish, born in Evansville, Indiana. Rosa married out of her faith, and my great-grandmother didn't speak about her heritage, beyond the names. She only knew one of her mother's sisters, none of her mother's brothers.But when I went to the museum, I was shocked to realize that my own grandfather, born in 1912, would have been sent to a camp if they had lived in Europe, or God forbid, Hitler had made it here to the US. My father's parents came from Poland as children by 1913. They later became Jehovah's Witnesses. All three groups were put into camps. I realized I probably had maternal relatives that died in the camps. So did another 6 million people that included Poles and Jehovah's Witnesses. Both of my parents could have died, and I would never be here. It horrifies and angers me when people say the Holocaust never happens. And it scare me that I see things happening in the last six years that make me realize "Never Again" might not be true.
@rebeccadorfman3244
@rebeccadorfman3244 Жыл бұрын
Really powerful! Never forget 🙏🏼
@khrisbreezy3406
@khrisbreezy3406 Жыл бұрын
I've been a fan since you danced to Chris Brown's song Indigo, but I never knew you were jewish like me, we are proud of you for speaking up, antisemitism is growing everyday and the youth are easily influenced to hate us jews, hopefully your voice will change their minds and know what's what, keep on being great, oh and you're so beautiful, inside and outside
@sheilagochnauer2940
@sheilagochnauer2940 Жыл бұрын
My great grandparents were Holocaust survivors too. It is a sad that our children aren't taught this in school.
@karenh4875
@karenh4875 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing your experience. I've decided to subscribe to your channel because of this. Although your dance videos are a lot of fun too.
@shainazion4073
@shainazion4073 Жыл бұрын
I am one of the few Jews of my generation that actually had 4 Jewish grandparents alive. My mother's parents came from the border of Russia and Poland. My father's parents, my grandmother came from Chechoslovakia, my grandfather, from Hungary. They met in New York's Central Park and fell in love and married. Many of my other relatives, great aunts, uncles, cousins, great grandparents were murdered in the Shoah.
@veganfitness7309
@veganfitness7309 Ай бұрын
I just learned that you also have hungarian jewish ancestors. That part of my family who went to auswitz did not survive none of them,but my grendfather and grandmother survived the II th word war az hungarian jews. I am gratefull for all your contents. i also rewatched my intervies with my grandparrents afterr they passed away. i was not raised religious,but after i felt that i want to be part of it a litle bit more
@tobylawson7682
@tobylawson7682 Жыл бұрын
Such a sad, sad time in the world. The fact that millennials don’t believe this happened is directly tied to no longer teaching this in schools and it is abhorrent. How can younger generations ever know what hate can become if they don’t see the biggest examples of it throughout history. Sadly, It isn’t on the agenda anymore and that’s just terribly wrong. So sorry for your family’s pain.
@alinamiller8627
@alinamiller8627 7 ай бұрын
I came across this post while surfing JPost and other websites. I went to school at Coral Park Senior High and remember your mother. I knew NOTHING of the Holocaust as a teenager. It just wasn't being taught in the schools as I remember. As an adult after having visited Israel twice and studying the Holocaust I learned and taught my children. But as you and your mother and your grandparents share the truth of what happened perhaps, just perhaps people won't remain as ignorant as I was. We NEED to know. We CANNOT forget. We must do what we can to stand with the Jewish people.
@grumpyiwegianpodcast3505
@grumpyiwegianpodcast3505 Жыл бұрын
My Great Grand Parents were Holocaust survivors in that same Polish death camp, They were lucky compared to others as just days after being off loaded from the train cars that the Nazi's had used to bring them there, they were recued by I believe it was US Forces. After some time spent in Hospital being treated for malnutrition they were given a choice of where they wanted to go to live. They choice the USA. @Montana Tucker Thank you for sharing your trip with us. We can Never Forget!
@MT-vo4md
@MT-vo4md Жыл бұрын
So so proud of you!❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@tracystoutbehunin9303
@tracystoutbehunin9303 Жыл бұрын
I’m soooo impressed that you were so brave to share and create such a deep and moving video about your family. For a couple years I’ve been listening to the shoa foundation personal accounts of the Haulocast. No words can describe what these beautiful people endured. I love that u are young talented and bravely telling this story.
@michaelgoemmel896
@michaelgoemmel896 Жыл бұрын
My direct family are the lucky ones who fled early and got to America. Never to see or hear from anyone in our family who didn’t leave again. Stay strong in these hard times. What we do now cannot compare to those who suffered back then. I have faith in you.
@dougschriefer3076
@dougschriefer3076 7 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing. If we do not remember, and take a stand then we are doomed to repeat history. NEVER FORGET
@markhuebner7580
@markhuebner7580 11 ай бұрын
Go Montana, go! Amazing journey telling a tale of your family's amazing perseverance in spite the horrors of the world we live in. Go team!
@skontheroad
@skontheroad 27 күн бұрын
I have put together trips likes these for American High Schoolers going to Germany (they do a Poland trip later on). This man is a great tour guide!!
@hobertlee7598
@hobertlee7598 27 күн бұрын
YOU ARE A VERY GOOD LADY MONTANA,,,THANK YOU FOR THE DOCUMENTARIES
@גליתאנגור-ש1צ
@גליתאנגור-ש1צ Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much dear Montana Tucker! In today's anti-Semitic world, uploading videos remembering the holocaust is not a matter of course!
@frankiebaby5770
@frankiebaby5770 Жыл бұрын
I can’t even imagine the heartache you felt stepping foot on that land were so many Innocent lives were taken. Including your own family member. I can’t imagine trying to understand what they went through. I can try to understand. But I will never know. I truly am so sickened that so many innocent lives were taken at the hands of disgusting heartless and senseless people! I am so sorry for family and other people’s families who has lost their loved ones during these horrific events. I pray your family can heel from this if they haven’t already. I can’t imagine or even begin to imagine. I hope all the lives that were taken, I pray they are with God and I pray God holds them and keeps them forever 🙏🏼
@izabelahys7880
@izabelahys7880 Жыл бұрын
Knowledge is Power. Exelent work ...I'm from Poland and still touch a lot of people hearts.
@monart2009
@monart2009 Жыл бұрын
Big hugs from Poland❤️
@nunyabiznez6381
@nunyabiznez6381 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather's brother was an officer in the U.S. Army WWII. Most people know of the larger death camps. My uncle and his unit stumbled upon a much smaller one in Germany. What they found was a camp that had just been abandoned by the nazis. There were hundreds of bodies of children lined up in a trench as though they had just interrupted a burial. They searched building by building to look for survivors. My uncle went into one building and the stench was overpowering. In his journal he describes it as a nightmare visit to hell. He said that little bodies were laying on shelves all over the room. He felt an incontrollable urge to vomit when he noticed the bodies were actually moving. He thought they were dead because of how emaciated they were. There were just over 300 children and no adults in the camp. They searched camp for food and water and found stockpiles of canned goods in a store room attached to the guard's mess hall. Most of the children who could talk said they hadn't eaten in days. Immediately my uncle sent a contingent of soldiers into the nearby village to search for the guards. I guess the guards must have thought that American soldiers would not be able to figure out who the guards were. They immediately arrested over a dozen men and brought them back tot he camp. When the guards returned to the camp, a handful of the strongest surviving children, all around ten and eleven years old were asked to identify the soldiers and they pointed out all but I think one. For a quick moment my uncle and his men turned away to survey other parts of the camp when several of the children pounced on some of the guards and tore them apart literally. My uncle reported the guard deaths in his official report as suicides. The soldiers did their best to nurse as many of the children back to health with the meager supplies they could find and brought with them and of course fed the children and gave them water and when they could get it milk until higher authorities could come in and decide what to do about the children whom my uncle thought were mostly the sole survivors of their respective families. I believe the children ranged in age from around five to about 14. My uncle's journals went on in great detail about the conditions of the camp and the children he found there and the interactions of his men and the guards who were kept locked in a building waiting the higher ranking officers. There was one additional confrontation where an older boy shoved a landscaping tool into the belly of one of the guards, that was also officially reported as a suicide by my uncle. He figured the children didn't need to be investigated as possible criminals for how they reacted when they had the chance. My uncle figured they were owed some comeuppance. My uncle was a lieutenant and finally a major showed up and took over sending my uncle further ahead down the road with his men so his journal doesn't discus further the camp or the children but the entries for those four days reads like an insane nightmare. My uncle being quite detailed. For example the children described their last meal as being moldy and infested with maggots. Additional children died while my uncle waited. Something like 280 children survived that camp total. They had said they were transferred in from other camps and not all spoke German. They were a mix of boys and girls but mostly boys due to the fact that most of the girls died. More accurately the girls were mostly murdered. KZbin would likely suspend my account if I transcribed much of the horror done to the children in that camp. Furthermore some of it might be construed as a violation of federal law if I described in detail what I read. That's right, I could go to federal prison for transcribing some of what the children said those nazi monsters did to them. Suffice it to say that the children were trafficked to wealthy sadistic nazi pedophiles who got their jollies from making innocent little children scream in creative ways.
@steve.57
@steve.57 Жыл бұрын
May their memories be a blessing forever. Thank you Ms Tucker for your visit in Poland and more important though is that you share it with your fans. If they are young which I believe they are, they most likely don't even know of our *the Jewish People's plight. Thank you and Montana, one day perhaps you will come home to Israel for good!. Shalom luch me'Ha'aretz.
@MichaelSmtih-t2z
@MichaelSmtih-t2z Жыл бұрын
Your Grandparents are looking doen on you and they are proud! Love this so much
@charlenerathgeb8217
@charlenerathgeb8217 11 ай бұрын
That was absolutely beautiful to watch…the love for your family. I find it upsetting that this has been followed by October 7th, 2023. It is like you predicted something like that was imminent, with the rising antisemitism. And you sadly also predicted the worlds response. 💔💔
@slaterjl
@slaterjl Жыл бұрын
Just watched this in November 2023 - thank you for doing this 💙
@jeffb9939
@jeffb9939 Жыл бұрын
My father in law's family was murdered in front of him. he was only spared because he was a tailor.
@Ohnothetableits
@Ohnothetableits Жыл бұрын
❤❤ a wonderful documentary. We stand with the Jewish community. Stop the hate. Knowledge is power.
@kaitieteal8157
@kaitieteal8157 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for being a voice against antisemitism. I've subscribed to you bc of this. Stay strong. Your making a difference.
@alissyagreenwood4120
@alissyagreenwood4120 Жыл бұрын
So proud of you 👏 ❤️
@sandyk378
@sandyk378 Жыл бұрын
Such evil must never be forgotten! The triumph of the heart in horrific circumstances is truly miraculous because of our Creator!
@jamesmichaelwalker683
@jamesmichaelwalker683 3 ай бұрын
There has always been an exception for many to eradicate the particularism, specificity and exceptionalism of the Jews. As a result, the antisemitism could be an endless issue. What matters is to continue to bring awareness on that and help people get out of their ignorance.
@TheILoveTwillight
@TheILoveTwillight 3 ай бұрын
So important! Thank you for sharing!
@fanofjets
@fanofjets Жыл бұрын
Thank you, Montana, for spreading this very important message! I will share your documentary on my social media. (I accidentally hit the thumbs-down button, which is so close to the share button. I hope I was able to undo this - and apologize if this registered. Thumbs up and shared!)
@taliron
@taliron 6 ай бұрын
Than you Montana for your sharing, Toda raba. SHOA should be taught in every school everywhere, especially in Muslim countries. With Love !!! ♥♥♥
@placedubuzz9660
@placedubuzz9660 Жыл бұрын
I discover your channel I discover your talent as a dancer and your very nice clip.. bravo for showing the world what our people have been through.. to remember that anti-Semitism still exists everywhere unfortunately.. congratulations to you for what you are a fan from Israel
@shellybennett4483
@shellybennett4483 Жыл бұрын
It is sad. It's hard to forgive oppression. It's good to take perspective now and again. God be with you. By the way, I love yur dance moves.😇🌏
@kandygibson6778
@kandygibson6778 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Montana. I visited the Dachau Concentration Camp while Germany ten years ago. You could cut the heaviness and tension with a knife. It was as if the victims were crying out from their mass graves. I feel that the treatment of the Jews during WWII has been overlooked, ignored and downplayed. See something say something. Yes, I know, it was not as simple as that in Nazi Germany.
@feandin
@feandin Жыл бұрын
I'm not even sure how I got here, but I've stayed till the end. The forest in Głogów near Rzeszów is very close to where I live. I did lit a candle on this grave many times. I go there regularly. ❤ I just would like for people to remember that the camps were German nazi camps. We Poles are not perfect, but we would never engage in a genocide.
@AniBAretz
@AniBAretz 7 ай бұрын
Thank you, Montana, and your mother and crew for bearing witness. I wish you could borrow a single children's shoe from Auschwitz and take it to classrooms, passing it around and asking the children: What do you think this is? When do you think it was made and worn? Could this have been a shoe worn by your own grandparents or greatgrandparents when they were little? Can you imagine them wearing such shoes? Now, let me tell you the story of this shoe. Let me start with the shortest story ever written, attributed to the great Ernest Hemingway. It simply goes: "For sale: baby shoes, never worn." Then, stay silent a minute while the children puzzle that out. Mention it, again, at the end, and ask what the story means, and whether they can imagine all the children who were not born because their parents and grandparents and great grandparents were murdered in the Holocaust. I think this angle will reach them and touch their souls.
@Man-ic8rx
@Man-ic8rx Жыл бұрын
NEVER AGAIN IS NOW! Pray for Israel 🇮🇱 Pray for the Jewish people ✡️
@atarakay9900
@atarakay9900 Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@reliantncc1864
@reliantncc1864 Жыл бұрын
I've only heard about this because you appeared on the Ben Shapiro show. It's good that you were able to access a giant platform like Shapiro's to spread your human story. I know a great deal about the Holocaust, having read dozens of books on the subject and spoken to survivors, but I'm touched that a younger person put in the effort you did. We all have to keep the memories alive and make a commitment to fight back against it ever happening again.
@August211982
@August211982 7 ай бұрын
So much grief…. And when October 07, 2023 and so much antisemitism. Beyond heartbreaking 💔
@NASCARFAN93100
@NASCARFAN93100 Жыл бұрын
🙏❤️
@jwollheim
@jwollheim Жыл бұрын
My family barely escaped too, and not nearly all of them. Thanks for this. Am yisrael chai!
@DailyMorningCrew
@DailyMorningCrew Жыл бұрын
You’re amazing❤❤
@lorrainenicoletti6232
@lorrainenicoletti6232 Жыл бұрын
You are a Hero . Never Forget. You are a powerful voice ! God is good The spirit never dies ❤️ Nyc Love
@jimdemers4000
@jimdemers4000 5 ай бұрын
To understand this, one only need go to the university’s where people are screaming support for delivery of Jewish blood. Meanwhile, somewhere in Gaza hostages are being held whose only crime is being Jewish. The moral sickness is overwhelming us again.
@extanegautham8950
@extanegautham8950 11 ай бұрын
Bravo, Miss! or Ms.!
@אביגילדיסקין
@אביגילדיסקין 7 ай бұрын
I'm so proud of u❤
@deborahstollman6238
@deborahstollman6238 Жыл бұрын
G-d bless you Montana 🙏🏻🇮🇱🙏🏻
@wendyhack8644
@wendyhack8644 Жыл бұрын
I’ll never forget. 😢
Liberators and Survivors: The First Moments
15:27
Yad Vashem
Рет қаралды 6 МЛН
The evil clown plays a prank on the angel
00:39
超人夫妇
Рет қаралды 53 МЛН
Tuna 🍣 ​⁠@patrickzeinali ​⁠@ChefRush
00:48
albert_cancook
Рет қаралды 148 МЛН
Une nouvelle voiture pour Noël 🥹
00:28
Nicocapone
Рет қаралды 9 МЛН
Meet The Most Dangerous Women In America's Prisons | Trevor Mcdonald
45:58
Why almost all of Denmark's Jews survived the Holocaust
11:05
Imperial War Museums
Рет қаралды 1,5 МЛН
"All My Mothers" -The Story of Yehudith Kleinman
27:00
Yad Vashem
Рет қаралды 2,4 МЛН